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HEALTHY SYSTEMS = TRAUMA-INFORMED AND TRAUMA-RESPONSIVE
Sandra L. Bloom, M.D.Dornsife School of Public Health, Drexel University
a philosophical or theoretical framework
P
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Assumptions that determine what we think, feel and do, shared by
group, and outside of our individual conscious awareness.
Help our brains automatically organize information.
It’s not “What’s wrong with you?”
It’s “What happened to you?”
Foderaro, 1991
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The older paradigm that has dominated group life – and
therefore individual existence – for at least the last two hundred years is a model that sees organizations
as machines.
A. de Geus, (2002)
The Living Company: Habits for Survival in a Turbulent Business Environment.
Boston, Harvard Business School Press.
The newer model is that of organizations as alive, possessing the basic requirements of a living system
A. de Geus, (2002), The Living Company: Habits for Survival in a Turbulent Business Environment. . Boston, Harvard Business School Press.
• Biology and evolutionary biology• Systems theory• Cybernetics• Quantum theory and nonlocality• Complexity theory and Emergence
The underpinning for this new worldview:
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LIVING SYSTEMS THEORY
A general theory about the existence of all living systems, their structure, interaction, behavior and development.
A system is a whole which consists of a set of two or more parts.
Each part affects the behavior of the whole, depending on how it interacts with the other parts of the system.
Life keeps emerging out of the previous system and is different from its predecessors and yet has parallels
LIV
ING
SYS
TEM
S T
HEO
RY
(Mil
ler,
197
8)
The Supranational System
The Society
The Organization
The Group
The Organism
The Organ
The Cell
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LIVING SYSTEMS ADAPT IN ORDER TO SURVIVE
HEALING WAS LIKE STRAIGHTENING A TREE TO GROW TOWARD THE SUN: A
LITTLE AT A TIME
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PEELING AN ONION DOWN THROUGH THE LEVELS OF
ADAPTATION
Organizations, like individuals, are living, complex, adaptive systems and that being alive, they are vulnerable to stress,
particularly chronic and repetitive stress.
Organizations, like individuals, can be traumatized and the
result of traumatic experience can be as devastating for organizations as it is for
individuals.
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When two or more systems – whether these consist of individuals, groups, or organizations – have significant relationships with one another, they tend
to develop similar thoughts, feelings and behaviors.K. K. Smith et al, 1989
PARALLEL PROCESS MAY BE THE KEY TO
NONVIOLENT, REVOLUTIONARY
CHANGE
• INDIVIDUALS• FAMILIES• ORGANIZATIONS• COMMUNITIES• SOCIETY
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pattern of shared basic assumptions that a group has learned as it solved its
problems…and that has worked well enough to be
considered valid and taught to new members
How we do things around here
Accumulated Wisdom Largely unconscious
Organizational Culture
FUNDAMENTAL DILEMMAS FOR CHANGING CULTURE IN LIVING SYSTEMS
Failure to understand
the nature of living systems
Flawed understanding of the nature
of change
Failure to recognize that
all change involves RISK
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KEY STARTING POINT
Less violence, more safety
Less injuries
Less staff turnover
Better results
More success
Better teamwork
More pleasure meaning
satisfaction
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ATTRACTED TO GREATER HEALTH
A state of optimum regulation and
adaptive functioning of body, mind and relationships that depends on the integration of function.
A HEALTHY SYSTEM
Has a clear and obtainable mission that is driven by a
shared, well‐articulated vision
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MISSION DRIVEN, TRAUMA-RESPONSIVE ORGANIZATION
An organization that counteracts the short‐term and long‐term effects of stress, adversity and trauma on its managers,
staff, and the people it serves while staying true to its mission, expanding social justice and improving the health
and well‐being of all organizational stakeholders .
A HEALTHY SYSTEM
• Is driven by a coherent, practiced, shared value system.
• The values are modeled by leadership.
• The values can be seen in routine daily behavior.
• The values are embedded in the public presentation of the organization.
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TRAUMA-RESPONSIVE VALUES
Sanctuary Commitments
Apply to everyone and all decisions
At the heart of creating trauma‐responsive systems
A HEALTHY SYSTEM
Has authoritative leaders
Do their best to model system values
Count on others’ input for decisions
Know who and when to include in decisions
Try to lead consensus whenever possible
Set high expectations and reward good performance
Do not play favorites
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A HEALTHY SYSTEM
Leaders assume responsibility, acknowledge others’ accomplishments.
Leadership values the power of organizational culture.
Leaders who want to work with decentralized authority and distributed power and can also make decisions
Leaders who promote the self-organizing properties of organizations.
Recognize their own system as a living system.
TRAUMA-RESPONSIVE ORGANIZATION
Leadership makes long‐term commitment to trauma‐informed change.
Leadership commits human and nonhuman practical resource
Leadership solicits and organizes a representative implementation team that includes service recipients, people‐with‐lived‐experience
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A HEALTHY SYSTEMHAS PERIODIC CHECKUPS
TRAUMA-RESPONSIVE ORGANIZATION
• Visual: informative, orderly, clean, comfortable, beauty, inviting
• Interviews: phone and in‐person
• Surveys (i.e. ARTIC and others)
Team begin an internal self‐assessment –would you want to receive services here?; would you want to work here if you knew what it was really like?
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TRAUMA-RESPONSIVE ORGANIZATION
Decides what metrics make sense consistent with trauma‐informed knowledge
Uses that knowledge to inform objectives and change process
Regularly reviews metrics to assess sustained change.
A HEALTHY SYSTEM
Is a safe and trustworthy organization for all stakeholders
Works on restoring safety and trust when there has been a breach
Has resources available to build, maintain and restore trust
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TRAUMA-RESPONSIVE ORGANIZATION
SAFETY
Physical
Psychological
Social
Moral
A safety culture encompasses all four domains of safety
Team assessment of where the “social immune system” needs repair
Team begins to define what changes may need to occur to create and maintain a safety culture.
Respectful boundaries support safety.
COMMITMENT TO NONVIOLENCE
A HEALTHY SYSTEM
Has well-regulated emotions
Is emotionally intelligent
Recognizes patterns
Understands individual and
group dynamics
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TRAUMA-RESPONSIVE ORGANIZATIONRecognition of emotional dysregulation as primary sign of exposure to trauma/adversity.
Has tools in place that help promote emotional regulation for everyone.
Emotions are honored but do not rule
There is recognition that emotions are contagious and become collective.
COMMITMENT TO EMOTIONAL INTELLIGENCE
A HEALTHY SYSTEM
Encourages participatory democratic structures
Minimizes the abusive use of power
Values diversity of race, age, gender, education, experience, etc.
Finds complex solutions to complex problems through creativity, innovation, and teamwork.
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TRAUMA-RESPONSIVE ORGANIZATION
Recognizes that all trauma is about the abusive use of power.
To avoid retraumatization, the constructive use of power – individual and collective ‐must be understood throughout the organization.
Democratic, participatory structures are the best protection against abuse of power.
COMMITMENT TO DEMOCRACY
A HEALTHY SYSTEM
Is committed to open, honest and frequent communication
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Team develops a communication plan to inform
everyone in the organization. Team develops
materials to inform internal
and external stakeholders.
COMMITMENT TO OPEN COMMUNICATION
A HEALTHY SYSTEM
Retains ….
Draws upon …
Learns from ….
Uses……
ITS CORPORATE MEMORY
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RECOVERING MEMORY
• Founding vision
• History of trauma
• History of loss
• Failures
• Adaptations
• Successes
Organizational history is reviewed including:
TRAUMA‐RESPONSIVE ORGANIZATION
COMMITMENT TO OPEN COMMUNICATION
A HEALTHY SYSTEMIS A LEARNING ORGANIZATION
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TRAUMA-RESPONSIVE ORGANIZATION
COMMITMENT TO SOCIAL LEARNING
(ANIMATED SLIDE)TRAUMA-RESPONSIVE ORGANIZATION
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TRAUMA-RESPONSIVE ORGANIZATION
Has routine conflict management strategies.
Uses all kinds of conflict as opportunities for new learning.
Seeks creative, integrative solutions to challenging problems.
A HEALTHY SYSTEMKnows how to unlearn
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TRAUMA-RESPONSIVE ORGANIZATION
• What should we keep?
• What should we eliminate?
• What should we do that is new?
KEY QUESTIONS
COMMITMENT TO SOCIAL LEARNING
TRAUMA-RESPONSIVE ORGANIZATION
Standard operating procedures, policies and procedures are reviewed for consistency with organizational mission and values.
Trauma‐informed values incorporated into interviewing, hiring orientation, and all human resource practices.
COMMITMENT TO SOCIAL LEARNING
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A HEALTHY SYSTEMCares about social justice and does
its best to “walk the talk”
TRAUMA-RESPONSIVE ORGANIZATION
Is about the human rights of everyone, including children.
The personal IS political
Recognizes that trauma exposure can cause the loss of meaning and purpose.
Finds a way to strike a balance between the needs of the individual and the needs of a group.
COMMITMENT TO SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY
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A HEALTHY SYSTEMDevelops a shared language for working together, organizing change, solving
problems.
TRAUMA-RESPONSIVE ORGANIZATION
Simple enough language for all to understand.
Conveys indispensable ideas about healing from trauma and adversity.
Becomes an effective problem‐organizing and problem‐solving tool
COMMITMENT TO GROWTH AND CHANGE
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TRAUMA-RESPONSIVE ORGANIZATION
Trauma = Loss
Recognizes resistance to change as resistance to loss.
Honors loss
Expects adaptive change
COMMITMENT TO GROWTH AND CHANGE
A HEALTHY SYSTEMKnows how to party!
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Team organizes a system‐wide celebratory kick‐off
Routinely looks for, finds, and celebrates even small successes
Orients itself toward a better future
TRAUMA‐RESPONSIVE ORGANIZATION
COMMITMENT TO GROWTH AND CHANGE
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• we need to feel safe in all life dimensions to think complexly
NONVIOLENCE:
• we need to understand individual/group consciousness and unconsciousness
EMOTIONAL INTELLIGENCE:
• we learn through trial‐and‐error in context of mutual trust
SOCIAL LEARNING:
• we need to keep information honest, open, and flowing – secrets make us sick
OPEN COMMUNICATION:
TRAUMA‐INFORMED VALUES ….
• we need to avoid abuse of power and have wide participation to deal with complex problems
DEMOCRACY:
• we need to balance our individual needs and desires with those of the collective good
SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY:
• we need to change and all change requires loss and will not happen without vision
GROWTH & CHANGE:
TRAUMA‐INFORMED VALUES ….
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PUBLIC HEALTH APPROACH TO LIVING SYSTEMS
• Universal knowledge about trauma, adversity and its effects on all living
systems
PRIMARY: Trauma-informed
• Policies and practices in place to minimize damage and maximize
opportunities for healthy growth and development in all populations at risk.
• Context for healing and recovery
SECONDARY: Trauma-responsive
• Free up energy, integrate full biographical narrative, safe exploration of
new modes of being
TERTIARY: Trauma-specific
BECOMING TRAUMA‐
RESPONSIVE AND HEALING ONE’S ORGANIZATION IS NOT FOR THE FAINT OF HEART
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In the field of mental health, most attention has been given to psychotherapy, some to mental hygiene, but very little as yet, to the design of a whole culture which will foster
healthy personalities.
Maxwell Jones, M.D. The Therapeutic Community, 1953
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SANDRA L. BLOOM, M.D. ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR,
HEALTH MANAGEMENT & POLICYDORNSIFE SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH, DREXEL UNIVERSITY, PHILADELPHIA, PA
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